805 Ky. Admin. Regs. 1:110

Current through Register Vol. 51, No. 6, December 1, 2024
Section 805 KAR 1:110 - Underground injection control

RELATES TO: KRS 353.180(3), 353.510, 353.520, 353.550, 353.570(1), (2), 353.590, 353.992, 40 C.F.R. 146.6, 42 U.S.C. 300j-6

NECESSITY, FUNCTION, AND CONFORMITY: KRS 353.540 authorizes the Department for Natural Resources to administer and enforce the provisions of KRS 353.500 through 353.720. KRS 353.520 prohibits the waste of oil and gas; the unreasonable damage to underground fresh or mineral water supply, workable coal seams, or other mineral deposits in the operations for the discovery, development, production, or handling of oil and gas; the unnecessary or excessive surface loss or destruction of oil or gas or their constituents; and the drowning with water of any stratum or part thereof capable of providing oil or gas in paying quantities, except for secondary recovery or disposal purposes or in hydraulic fracturing or other completion practices. KRS 353.592 authorizes the department to develop a regulatory program for the purpose of accepting primary responsibility for the administration of the Underground Injection Control Program. This administrative regulation establishes requirements for the drilling, casing, operation, plugging, construction, conversion, and maintenance of Class II wells and the protection of fresh water zones from contamination associated with the production of oil and gas.

Section 1. Definitions. Terms defined by KRS 353.510 and this section shall apply to this administrative regulation.
(1) "Administrator" means the regional administrator for Region IV of U.S. EPA.
(2) "Aquifer" means an underground geological formation, group of formations, or part of a formation that is capable of yielding a significant amount of water to a well or spring.
(3) "Area of review" means that area within not less than a fixed radius of one-fourth (1/4) mile around an injection well, except that at the request of the permit applicant and approval of the director, the area of review may be deemed to be the zone of endangering influence calculated in accordance with 40 C.F.R. 146.6.
(4) "Casing" means a pipe or tubing of appropriate material, of varying diameter and weight, lowered into a borehole during or after drilling in order to support the sides of the hole and prevent the walls from caving, to prevent loss of drilling mud or fluids into porous ground, or to prevent water, gas, or other fluid from entering or leaving the hole.
(5) "Cementing" means the operation in which a cement slurry is displaced around the casing's annulus.
(6) "Class II well" means a well that injects fluids:
(a) Brought to the surface in connection with natural gas storage operations, or conventional oil or natural gas production and could be commingled with waste waters from gas plants, which are an integral part of production operations, unless those waters are classified as a hazardous waste upon injection;
(b) For enhanced recovery of oil or natural gas;
(c) For permanent disposal of produced brine water; or
(d) For storage of hydrocarbons that are liquid at standard temperature and pressure.
(7) "Commercially producible" means a well that could be used commercially for the production of oil and gas or for Class II injection.
(8) "Confining zone" means a geological formation, group of formations, or part of a formation that is capable of limiting fluid movement above an injection zone.
(9) "Contaminant" means any physical, chemical, biological, or radiological substance or matter in water.
(10) "Date of primacy" means the effective date of the Administrator's approval of Kentucky's Underground Injection Control (UIC) Program made pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 300h-4, Section 1425.
(11) "Division" means the Kentucky Division of Oil and Gas.
(12) "Endangerment" means that an injection operation could result in the presence of a contaminant in ground water, which supplies or could reasonably be expected to supply any public water system, and the presence of that contaminant, or any contaminant, could result in violation of any national primary drinking water regulation or could adversely affect the health of persons.
(13) "EPA" means the United States Environmental Protection Agency.
(14) "Flow rate" means the volume per time unit given to the flow of gases or other fluid substance that emerges from an orifice, pump, or turbine or passes along a conduit or channel.
(15) "Fluid" means any material or substance that flows or moves in a semisolid, liquid, sludge, gas, or other form or state.
(16) "Formation breakdown pressure" means indicated values from data recorded prior to and during squeeze cementing, acidizing, or hydraulic fracturing treatments performed by service companies. These breakdown pressure values are frequently reported as the surface gauge pressure that shall, through appropriate engineering calculations, be modified to reflect the pressure at which an exposed formation fractures and allows fluid to be injected into the formation.
(17) "Freshwater zone" means an underground source of drinking water.
(18) "Ground water" means water below the land surface in an aquifer's zone of saturation.
(19) "Injection well' means a well into which fluids are being injected.
(20) "Injection zone" means a geological formation, group of formations, or part of formation receiving fluids through a well.
(21) "Mechanical integrity" means a condition of injection wells that exists if there is not leakage in the well's casing, tubing, or packer and if there is not fluid movement into an underground source of drinking water through vertical channels adjacent to the well bore.
(22) "Owner or operator" means the company or person having secured a permit for:
(a) A new or converted well; or
(b) A rule authorized well in operation prior to the effective date or primacy, as defined by subsection (10) of this section.
(23) "Packer" means a device lowered into a well to produce a fluid-tight seal.
(24) "Plugging" means the act or process of stopping the flow of water, oil, or gas into or out of a formation through a borehole or well penetrating that formation by the placement of cement plugs in the wellbore.
(25) "Project" means a group of wells in a single operation.
(26) "Public water system" means a system for the provision to the public of piped water for human consumption, if the system has at least fifteen (15) service connections or regularly serves at least twenty-five (25) individuals.
(27) "Underground source of drinking water or "USDW" means an aquifer or its portion, which is not an exempted aquifer and that:
(a)
1. Supplies any public water system; or
2. Contains a sufficient quantity of groundwater to supply a public system; and
(b)
1. Currently supplies drinking water for human consumption; or
2. Contains less than 10,000 mg/l total dissolved solids.
(28) "Well" means a borehole drilled, or proposed to be drilled, for the purpose of:
(a) Producing natural gas or petroleum, or one through which natural gas or petroleum is being produced; or
(b) Injecting water, gas, or other fluid or one into which water, gas, or other fluid is being produced.
Section 2. General.
(1) A person shall not drill a Class II well without first obtaining a permit to drill pursuant to KRS 353.570(1) and (2).
(2) A person shall not inject fluids to the subsurface through a Class II well without the authorization of the division in the form of a permit issued pursuant to Section 11 of this administrative regulation.
(3) The owner or operator of a Class II well shall maintain financial responsibility and resources to close, plug, and abandon the underground injection operation pursuant to the requirements in Section 8 of this administrative regulation.
(4) The fee requirements for an application to drill a new Class II injection well pursuant to KRS 353.590(2)(a) and a fifty (50) dollar fee pursuant to KRS 353.590(2)(b) shall suffice for and be applicable to the permit to inject.
(5) The permit to operate any Class II well may be transferred to a successor only after notice is given to the division on the Well Transfer for UIC Wells, Form OG-26, and shall include at least:
(a) The original operator's company name and address;
(b) The successor's company name and address;
(c) The permit number of the well;
(d) The Carter Coordinate location;
(e) The farm name and well number;
(f) Signatures of the original operator and the successor or that of their official representatives; and
(g) A statement that the successor assumes all responsibility for the well and provides financial responsibility pursuant to Section 8 of this administrative regulation.
(6) A Class II well with an outstanding noncompliance shall not be transferred, unless the successor is willing to correct deficiencies and submit a corrective action plan approved by the division pursuant to subsection (11) of this section.
(7) A Class II well shall be plugged in the manner established in 805 KAR 1:060.
(8) An injection permit shall not be issued unless the applicant demonstrates that the Class II well shall not cause the endangerment of a USDW.
(9)
(a) If the casing and cementing of a Class II well is inadequate and movement of fluids cause the endangerment of a USDW, the division shall require the owner or operator of a well to take necessary corrective action.
(b) Corrective action shall be completed within ninety (90) days of notification from the division to the owner or operator.
(c) Injection shall not be authorized until the corrective action has been completed and mechanical integrity has been demonstrated.
(10)
(a) In administering and applying this administrative regulation, the division shall, as practicable, take into account the varying geologic, hydrological, and historical conditions in different areas within the state.
(b) The division may, if consistent with other provisions of this section, upon submittal of the Class II Well Permit Application for Underground Injection Control, Form OG-14 and after notice and hearing, grant a variance from any requirement established in subsection (8) of this section upon a demonstration that alternate prudent engineering practices shall protect a USDW.
(11) The division may modify, suspend, or revoke a Class II well permit if the injection operation is altered in a way that does not adequately protect the USDW or if a mechanical integrity failure or downhole condition compromises the injection system.
Section 3. Exempted Aquifers. An aquifer or a portion thereof that complies with the criteria established in this section for a USDW may be determined by the division to be an "exempted aquifer" if it:
(1) Does not currently serve as a source of drinking water; and
(2) Cannot now and shall not in the future serve as a source of drinking water because:
(a) It is mineral, hydrocarbon, or geothermal energy producing, or could be demonstrated to contain minerals or hydrocarbons that, considering their quantity and location, are expected to be commercially producible;
(b) It is situated at a depth or location that makes recovery of water for drinking water purposes economically or technologically impractical;
(c) It is so contaminated that it would be economically or technologically impractical to render that water fit for human consumption; or
(d) The total dissolved solids content of the groundwater is more than 3,000 mg/l, and less than 10,000 mg/l and it is not reasonably expected to supply a public water system.
Section 4. Requirements Applicable to Class II Well Permits. Authorization to inject fluids through a Class II well shall be conditioned upon compliance with the requirements established in subsections (1) through (5) of this section:
(1)
(a) The owner or operator shall promptly notify the director in writing of any modification in the manner in which the injection operation is conducted or of any mechanical failure or downhole problem encountered in the operation of the Class II well or upon recognition of a failure in an injection system.
(b) A well or wells that appear to be leaking shall be shut down immediately and correction procedures shall be initiated within fifteen (15) days, or the permit to inject may be revoked.
(c) The notice to the director shall describe all proposed modifications or corrective actions and shall be subject to the approval of the director based on the requirements of this administrative regulation.
(2) The owner or operator shall give the division upon presentation of credentials, access to Class II wells and related facilities for the purpose of conducting inspections, witnessing mechanical integrity tests, implementing corrective action operations and plugging procedures, and testing samples of injected fluids.
(3)
(a) The owner or operator shall regulate the injection pressure so that the pressure in the injection zone does not initiate new fractures or propagate existing fractures in the confining zone that would cause the movement of injected fluids into a USDW.
(b) The division may, if necessary to ensure compliance with this requirement, establish limitations on the wellhead pressure at which a Class II well shall be operated.
(c) Any limitation shall be included as a permit condition or through an order issued after notice and opportunity for hearing.
(4)
(a) The owner or operator shall provide for the mechanical integrity of the well by operating without leaks in the casing, tubing, or packer and without fluid movement into a USDW through vertical channels adjacent to the well bore.
(b) The owner or operator shall, upon request of the division, conduct tests of the mechanical integrity of the Class II well, utilizing a method approved by the division as required in Section 6 of this administrative regulation.
(c) Each Class II well shall be tested for mechanical integrity at least every five (5) years pursuant to Section 6(6) of this administrative regulation.
(d) An alternative mechanical integrity test authorized by the division in accordance with the requirements established in this administrative regulation shall be approved by the division.
(5)
(a) The owner or operator shall monitor and record injection pressures rates and volumes at least monthly and shall submit on a completed and notarized Annual Disposal or Injection Well Monitoring Report, Form OG-18 provided by the division, an annual report of the results of monitoring to the division.
(b) The owner or operator shall retain all of the records on file for a period of at least five (5) years.
(c) The owner or operator of hydrocarbon storage or enhanced recovery wells may monitor them by manifold monitoring on a field or project basis rather than on an individual well basis if the facilities consist of more than one (1) injection well, operated with a common manifold, and if the owner or operator demonstrates to the division that manifold monitoring is equivalent to individual well monitoring.
Section 5. Construction Requirements for Class II Wells.
(1)
(a) A class II injection well proposed to be constructed after the effective date of primacy shall be constructed in accordance with applicable provisions of KRS 353.570(1) and (2) and 805 KAR 1:020 in a manner that shall prevent injected fluids from escaping to a USDW.
(b) Existing Class II wells authorized by EPA shall be exempt from this requirement unless the division determines in accordance with the requirements of this administrative regulation that corrective action is necessary to prevent injected fluids from escaping into a USDW.
(c)
1. A freshwater string of casing shall extend at least fifty (50) feet below the freshwater depth stated on the permit or the base of the deepest fresh water, whichever is greater.
2. All freshwater casing strings shall have cement circulated to fill the annular space of the casing.
3. This casing shall be cemented to assure the circulation of the cement to the surface.
4. The long string of casing shall extend at least from the surface to immediately above the injection interval, and shall have a minimum of 300 feet of cement behind the lowermost 300 feet of casing.
5. If the fresh water is not protected by a separate string of casing, then the long string shall be cemented with circulation of cement back to surface.
(d) Tubing shall be installed in the casing with a packer set at a depth not to exceed fifty (50) feet above the injection zone.
(e) The owner or operator shall provide a detailed description of the casing plan on the Casing and Cementing Plan for UIC Wells, Form OG-25, and submitted with the Class II Well Permit Application for Underground Injection Control, Form OG-14 for permit to inject.
(f) The casing plan shall be approved by the director and shall include a listing of the casing size, type, grade, depth of each casing string, and the class and volume of the cement to be used.
(2)
(a) An active oil and gas well or an abandoned or plugged well reopened for the purpose of conversion to a Class II injection well shall satisfy the requirements for cementing of a Class II well.
(b) If perforation of existing casing is required to satisfy the cementing requirements during the conversion of the well to a Class II well, a tubing and packer shall be installed in the existing casing to the area immediately above the injection interval, not to exceed fifty (50) feet above the injection interval.
(3) A Class II disposal well shall be designed to ensure that disposal zones are hydraulically isolated from USDW.
(4) The owner or operator shall provide the division with all required geophysical logs and results of tests conducted during the drilling and completion of a Class II well that specifically relate to the USDW, the confining zone adjacent to it, and the injection and adjacent formations, and shall include a:
(a) Geophysical log marked to indicate all fresh water zones, the confining zone and the injection interval;
(b) Geologic description of the confining and injection zone that shall include the lithologic description, geologic name, and thickness; and
(c)
1. Report describing the nature of fluids and formation pressure in the injection zone.
2. This information shall be obtained from geophysical logs, physical examinations of samples and cores, and chemical analysis, and shall be prepared by a professional geologist registered by the state of Kentucky.
3. The owner or operator may substitute information from nearby wells if comparable to the injection well, and in the case of an area permit, if sufficient information is available from wells within the field to adequately describe the whole field.
Section 6. Mechanical Integrity Requirements for Class II Injection Wells.
(1)
(a) Operators shall demonstrate mechanical integrity of new and existing Class II injection wells.
(b) The owner or operator shall submit a plan to demonstrate mechanical integrity with the application for permit to inject.
(2) An injection well shall be determined to have mechanical integrity if:
(a) There are not leaks in the casing, tubing, or packer; and
(b) There is not fluid movement into an underground source of drinking water through vertical channels adjacent to the injection well bore.
(3) One (1) of the following methods shall be used to evaluate the absence of significant leaks as established in subsection (2)(a) of this section:
(a) Following an initial pressure test, performed with liquid or gas, monitoring of the tubing and casing annulus pressure with sufficient frequency to be representative, as determined by the division in accordance with subsection (5)(c) of this section, while maintaining an annulus pressure different from atmospheric pressure measured at the surface; or
(b) Records of monitoring demonstrating the absence of significant changes in the relationship between injection pressure and injection flow rate for the following Class II enhanced recovery wells:
1. Existing wells completed without a packer if a pressure test has been performed and the data is available and if more than one (1) pressure test shall be performed at a time when the well is shut down and if the running of the test does not cause further loss of significant amounts of oil or gas; or
2. Existing wells constructed without a long string casing but with surface casing, which terminates at the base of fresh water, if local geological and hydrological features allow this construction and provided further that the annular space shall be visually inspected. For these wells, the division shall establish a monitoring program, which shall verify the absence of significant fluid movement from the injection zone into an USDW.
(4) One (1) of the following methods shall be used to confirm the absence of fluid movement as established in subsection (2)(b) of this section:
(a) The results of a temperature log, noise log, or cement bond log;
(b) Cementing records demonstrating the presence of adequate cement to prevent a migration; or
(c) other methods approved by the director, which comply with the requirements of this administrative regulation.
(5)
(a) The mechanical integrity test shall be performed on the annulus of the tubing and casing.
(b) A minimum pressure of 300 psi shall be applied to the annulus of the tubing and casing.
(c) The well shall be considered to have mechanical integrity if, at the end of thirty (30) minutes, there is no more than a plus or minus of three (3) percent change of the test pressure on the gauge.
(d) A mechanical integrity test shall be witnessed by division field inspector, who shall determine if the mechanical integrity test was successful.
(e) The division may require higher test pressures to be used if the anticipated injection pressure will be high.
(f) In the event a mechanical integrity test failure occurs, the owner or operator shall initiate corrective measures within thirty (30) days of the initial failure and perform a follow-up test within thirty (30) days after the completion of corrective measures. If the corrective measures require removal of the packer from the wellbore, the owner or operator shall submit a completed and notarized Class II Well Re-Work Report, Form OG-4 documenting the work performed.
(g) The test results shall be filed on the Certification of Mechanical Integrity, Form OG-22.
(6)
(a) The owner or operator of a Class II well shall schedule at five (5) year intervals or less, a mechanical integrity test as established in subsection (5) of this section.
(b) The owner or operator shall certify the test results to the division in writing within fifteen (15) days of completion of the test.
(7)
(a) The owner or operator shall not perform a mechanical integrity test of a Class II well without giving written notice to the division on the Application for Class II Internal Mechanical Integrity Test, From OG-44 within fifteen (15) calendar days prior to the proposed test date.
(b)The division shall then notify the owner or operator of the earliest possible date available to test the well.
Section 7. Area of Review for Class II Wells. The owner or operator shall supply the following information if applying for a permit to inject pursuant to Section 11 of this administrative regulation:
(1) A description of the area of review, which shall be determined by:
(a) A fixed radius of one-fourth (1/4) mile around the injection well, or one-fourth (1/4) mile around the permit area boundary; or
(b) The zone of endangering influence calculated in accordance with 40 C.F.R. 146.6 for an area of review less than one-fourth (1/4) mile;
(2) A map showing the following information within the area of review:
(a) Existing producing wells, injection wells, abandoned wells, dry holes, and water wells;
(b) Surface and subsurface mines, quarries, and other pertinent surface features including residences, roads, and faults; and
(c) The distribution manifold applying injection fluid to all wells in the area of review including all system monitoring points, for those injection wells, if operating from a common manifold;
(3) The following data for wells within the area of review:
(a) A tabulation of data, reasonably available from public records or otherwise known to the applicant, including a description of well type, construction, date drilled, location, depth, record of plugging or completion, and applicable additional information; and
(b) The record of completion and plugging for each well that penetrates the injection zone, and any other wells within the area of review wells that would be affected by any proposed increase in pressure if the injection well is to be operated over the fracture pressure of the injection formation; and
(4)
(a) For wells in the area of review that are improperly sealed, completed, or abandoned, a corrective action plan that consists of steps or modifications as necessary to prevent movement of fluid into underground sources of drinking water.
(b) The division shall consider the following criteria and factors during evaluation of the corrective action plan:
1. Nature and volume of injected fluids;
2. Nature of native fluids or by-products of injection;
3. Potentially affected population;
4. Geology;
5. Hydrology;
6. History of injection operations;
7. Completion and plugging records;
8. Plugging procedures upon abandonment; and
9. Hydraulic connections with underground sources of drinking water.
Section 8. Financial Responsibility.
(1) The owner or operator of a Class II well shall demonstrate financial responsibility to plug and abandon a well based on projected plugging cost estimates on the Class II Plugging and Abandonment Plan, Form OG-41. The form shall be reviewed for completeness and adequacy to protect the USDW.
(a) Financial responsibility of existing Class II wells prior to the date of primacy shall be submitted to the division pursuant to Section 9 of this administrative regulation.
(b) The owner or operator of a Class II well authorized by a permit to inject pursuant to this administrative regulation shall, upon application, demonstrate financial responsibility and submit the plugging abandonment plan in accordance with 805 KAR 1:060.
(2)
(a) If the division issues a letter of violation, forfeits the individual bond, and subsequently plugs the well, the owner or operator shall be responsible for any additional costs expended by the division for plugging the well that exceeds the bond amount.
(b) These costs, if not paid, shall be recovered by civil suit pursuant to KRS 353.180(3).
(c) In addition to the recovery of costs, the owner or operator shall be subject to penalties as established in KRS 353.992.
Section 9. Transitional Requirements for Owner or Operators of Class II Wells.
(1)
(a) The division shall accept a Class II well permit, including rule authorized wells, issued under the authority of the EPA administered program. Rule authorized wells shall be deemed permitted by the division, if the owner or operator satisfies the requirements this section.
(b) The division shall:
1. Accept records from EPA of all authorized wells; and
2. Create an inventory of approved existing wells.
(c) The financial responsibility demonstration required in Section 8 of this administrative regulation and the submission of the plugging and abandonment plan in Section 10 of this administrative regulation shall be completed within ninety (90) days following the effective date of primacy.
(d) If the existing bond posted with EPA complies with the requirements of Section 8 of this administrative regulation and is transferable to the division, the transfer of the bond shall be accepted by the division.
(2)
(a) The owner or operator of a Class II well having a mechanical integrity test approved by EPA shall remain on the same schedule of mechanical integrity tests upon the effective date of primacy.
(b) A copy of all documents showing approval by EPA of the well's mechanical integrity and a copy of all forms, test data, and logs required by and submitted to EPA shall be submitted to the division within ninety (90) days of the effective date of primacy.
(3) The owner or operator with a pending application submitted for Class II wells under the EPA program may transfer a pending application to the division and shall satisfy the permitting requirements in Section 11 of this administrative regulation upon the effective date of primacy.
Section 10. Plugging and Abandonment of Class II Wells.
(1) A Class II well shall be plugged in accordance with 805 KAR 1:060.
(2) The owner or operator shall provide a detailed description of the proposed plugging procedure and costs on the Class II Plugging and Abandonment Plan, Form OG-41, and submitted for approval with a completed and notarized Class II Well Permit Application for Underground Injection Control, Form OG-14 for permit to inject.
(3) The owner or operator shall notify the division in writing thirty (30) days prior to plugging and shall schedule with the division inspector a time and date for performing the plugging procedure.
(4) The inspector shall schedule the earliest date available.
(5) Upon completion of the plugging, the owner or operator shall file a plugging affidavit on Affidavit to Time and Manner of Plugging and Filling Well, Form OG-38, incorporated by reference in 805 KAR 1:060.
(6) After cessation of operations of two (2) years, the owner or operator shall plug and abandon the well in accordance with the plan, unless a notice is sent to the division describing actions or procedures that the owner or operator shall take to ensure that the well shall not cause the endangerment of a USDW during the period of temporary abandonment. These actions and procedures shall include compliance with the technical requirements applicable to active injection wells.
Section 11. Requirements for a Permit to Inject into a Class II Well. All persons seeking a permit to inject into a Class II well shall, after the effective date of primacy, comply with the requirements of this section.
(1) A person shall not inject fluids into the subsurface through a Class II well without obtaining a permit to inject.
(2) An application for a permit to inject shall be submitted on a notarized Class II Plugging and Abandonment Plan, Form OG-14, and shall include:
(a) A statement by the owner or operator as to whether the well will be used for enhanced recovery, hydrocarbon storage, or for disposal purposes;
(b) The approximate depth of the deepest known freshwater zone;
(c) In accordance with 805 KAR 1:030, a location plat for a permit to inject into a Class II injection well;
(d) An area of review map prepared on a 7.5 minute quadrangle topographic map and including:
1. The location of all known freshwater wells;
2. The location and completion or plugging record of all wells, whether producing or plugged;
3. The location of hazardous waste treatment or disposal facilities;
4. The location of rivers or streams;
5. The location of quarries and surface and subsurface mines;
6. The location of faults; and
7. The location of permanent residences;
(e) A schematic diagram of the well showing the:
1. Total depth of the plugback of the well;
2. Depth of the injection or disposal interval;
3. Geological name of the injection or disposal zone;
4. Geological name, thickness, and description of the confining zone;
5. Vertical distance separating the uppermost extremity of the injection zone from the base of the lowest USDW;
6. Depth of the top and the bottom of the casing and the cement;
7. Size of the casing and tubing and the depth of the packer; and
8. Depth to the base of the lowermost underground source of drinking water;
(f) For the conversion of an existing well, a copy of the completion report and any available geophysical log of the well;
(g) Proposed operating data, including:
1. The geological name, depth, and location of the source of the injection fluid;
2. A standard laboratory analysis of a representative sample of the fluid to be injected in accordance with the proposed Class II permit, with the following parameters, as established in 40 C.F.R. 136.3 and 40 C.F.R. Part 261 Appendix III:
a. Barium if sulfate is less than 500 mg/l;
b. Calcium;
c. Total Iron;
d. Magnesium;
e. Sodium;
f. Bicarbonate;
g. pH;
h. Specific Gravity;
i. Carbon Dioxide;
j. Total Dissolved Solids; and
k. Hydrogen Sulfide if H2S odor is detected;
3. A material safety data sheet for inhibitors if added to the injection fluid for control of scaling, corrosion, or bacterial growth;
4.
a. The nature of the annulus fluid to be used in the annulus between the tubing and casing.
b. This description shall include the type of fluid to be used and the corrosivity of the annulus fluid.
c. The amount of inhibitor to be added shall be listed; and
5. The proposed maximum injection rate and pressure. The owner or operator shall limit injection pressure to either a value:
a. That does not exceed a maximum injection pressure at the wellhead calculated to assure that the pressure during injection does not initiate new fractures or propagate existing fractures in the confining zone adjacent to an underground source of drinking water and shall not cause the movement or injection of fluids into an underground source of drinking water; or
b. For wellhead pressure calculated by using the following formula: Pmax = (0.733 psi/ft -(.433 psi/ft (Sg)))d, Where: Pmax = Maximum injection pressure (psia) at the wellhead; Sg = Specific gravity of the injected fluid; and d = Depth to the top of the injection zone in feet;
c. Alternate maximum injection pressures calculations may be utilized using instantaneous shut-in pressures recorded after stimulation treatments in adjacent wells in the same formation as the proposed injection zone;
(h) The location and description of each underground source of drinking water through which the well would penetrate;
(i) A description of the current or proposed casing program on the Casing and Cementing Plan for UIC Wells, Form OG-25, including the:
1. Casing size, weight, and type;
2. Cement volume and type; and
3. Packer type;
(j) A description of all proposed stimulation programs;
(k) A description of proposed plans to cope with all shut-ins or well failures, so as to prevent migration of fluids into any underground source of drinking water;
(l) If a manifold monitoring program is utilized, a description of the program and a demonstration equivalence to individual well monitoring;
(m) A corrective action plan, which shall be submitted for all wells within the area of review as required in Section 7(4) of this administrative regulation;
(n) A demonstration of financial responsibility as required in Section 8(2) of this administrative regulation and a plugging and abandonment plan as required in Section 10 of this administrative regulation; and
(o) The plan by the owner or operator of mechanical integrity. Each well shall be tested for mechanical integrity using the method as established in Section 6(5) of this administrative regulation.
(3) An application for permit shall be signed by the owner or operator of the injection well, including corporate officers, general partners, sole proprietors, or other persons authorized to execute documents on behalf of the applicant.
(4) With respect to an application, a Class II Well Permit Application for Underground Injection Control, Form OG-14, for a Class II well, an applicant shall personally or by certified mail submit a written notification describing the proposed well to each of the following persons, if the described property is located within one-quarter (1/4) mile of the proposed well:
(a) The owner or operator of each well for oil and gas purposes, including a well having temporary abandonment status as established in this administrative regulation or not yet in production;
(b) The permittee of an underground mine permitted under KRS Chapter 350; and
(c) Each owner of rights to surface or subsurface property that the well penetrates.
(5)
(a)
1. The notification required pursuant to this subsection shall state that a person who wishes to object to issuance of the permit shall, within thirty (30) days of receipt of the notification, submit written comments or request a hearing.
2. The notification shall include the address to which written comments or the hearing request shall be forwarded and where additional information may be obtained.
(b)
1. In addition to the notification required pursuant to this subsection, the applicant shall cause a notice of a permit application to be placed in a newspaper of general circulation in the county where the proposed well is located.
2. Individual and publication notices shall include:
a. The name and address of the applicant;
b. The location of the proposed well;
c. The geological name and depth of the injection zone;
d. The maximum injection pressure; and
e. The maximum rate of barrels each day.
3. The notice shall state that a person who wishes to object to issuance of the permit may, within thirty (30) days of publication of the notification, submit written comments or request a hearing.
4. The notification shall include the address to which the written comments or hearing requests shall be forwarded, how a person may receive written notice of the proceedings, and where additional information concerning the proposed permit may be obtained.
5. Proof of service of the notification required in this subsection shall be delivered to the division before a permit for a Class II well shall be issued.
(6)
(a) The owner or operator shall verbally notify field inspectors at least five (5) days before all mechanical integrity tests are performed.
(b) A written notice shall be given to the division at least fifteen (15) days before the tests are performed as established in Section 6(7) of this administrative regulation.
(7)
(a) The permit to inject into a Class II injection well shall remain valid for the life of the well or project.
(b) The permit may be terminated if the well or project is in violation of this administrative regulation and applicable provisions of KRS Chapter 353.
(c) The owner or operator shall comply with the requirements of all applicable administrative regulations.
Section 12. Completion and Monitoring Reports.
(1) The owner or operator shall upon completion of construction of a Class II well, file with the division a completed and notarized Certificate of Completion for an Injection Well, Form OG-23, within ninety (90) days of final construction.
(2)
(a) The owner or operator shall file an annual report of monthly monitoring of injection fluid volumes, injection pressure, and casing annulus pressure on Annual Disposal or Injection Well Monitoring Report, Form OG-18, on the twenty-eighth day of January for the previous twelve (12) months.
(b) The owner or operator shall retain all records on file for a period of at least five (5) years.
(c) The owner or operator of a liquid hydrocarbon storage or enhanced recovery well may monitor them by manifold monitoring on a field or project basis rather than on an individual well basis if the facilities:
1. Consist of more than one (1) injection well;
2. Operate with a common manifold; and
3. If the owner or operator demonstrates to the director that manifold monitoring is equivalent to individual monitoring.
(3) The owner or operator of a Class II injection well shall notify the director in writing within thirty (30) days of the termination of operations at which time the permit to inject shall expire.
Section 13. Workover of Class II Wells.
(1) The owner or operator shall notify the division within ninety (90) days of a well workover, logging, or testing that could reveal downhole conditions.
(2) The owner or operator shall submit a Well Rework Report, Form OG-4, documenting the activity within thirty (30) days following the completion of the rework.
(3) If the packer unseats during the workover, a mechanical integrity test shall be conducted as established in Section 6 of this administrative regulation.
(4) Injection shall not be allowed until an approved mechanical integrity test has been performed.
Section 14. Procedures for Public Participation in Enforcement Actions. Upon receiving a complaint from the public, interested parties or others, the division shall:
(1) Investigate and provide written response to all citizen complaints submitted regarding any concerns for the endangerment of an underground source of drinking water;
(2) Not oppose intervention by any citizen if permissive intervention is authorized pursuant to KRS 353.180(3); and
(3) Publish notice of and provide at least thirty (30) days for public comment on any proposed settlement of a division enforcement action beyond the forfeiture of a bond for a Class II well.
Section 15. Confidentiality of Information.
(1) Information submitted to the division pursuant to this administrative regulation may be claimed as confidential by the submitter. A claim of confidentiality shall be asserted upon submission in the manner on the application form or instructions. Other submissions shall be stamped with the words "confidential business information" on each page containing confidential information. If a claim is not made at the time of submission, the division may make the information available to the public without further notice.
(2) Claims of confidentiality shall not apply to:
(a) The name and address of any permit applicant or permittee;
(b) Information regarding the existence, absence, or level of contaminants in drinking water; and
(c) Records directed by statute to be disclosed or published.
Section 16. Penalties. An owner or operator in violation of the requirements of this administrative regulation shall be subject to the penalties established in KRS 353.992.
Section 17. Primacy. The provisions of this administrative regulation shall become effective upon the date of primacy, on or after which a Class II well shall be subject to the requirements of this administrative regulation and shall be exempt from 805 KAR 1:020, Sections 4, 5, and 6.
Section 18. Incorporation by Reference.
(1) The following material is incorporated by reference:
(a) "Class II Well Rework Report," Form OG-4, June 2019;
(b) "Class II Well Permit Application for Underground Injection Control," Form OG-14, June 2019;
(c) "Annual Disposal or Injection Well Monitoring Report," Form OG-18, June 2019;
(d) "Certification of Mechanical Integrity," Form OG-22, June 2019;
(e) "Certificate of Completion for an Injection Well," Form OG-23, June 2019;
(f) "Casing and Cementing Plan for UIC Wells," Form OG-25, June 2019;
(g) "Well Transfer for UIC Wells," Form OG-26, June 2019
(h) "Class II Plugging and Abandonment Plan", Form OG-41, June 2019; and
(i) "Application for Class II Internal Mechanical Integrity Test, Form OG-44, June 2019.
(2) These forms may be inspected, copied, and obtained, subject to applicable copyright law, at the Division of Oil and Gas, 300 Sower Boulevard, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601, Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Eastern Prevailing Time.

805 KAR 1:110

10 Ky.R. 1109; 11 Ky.R. 406; eff. 9-1-1984; 34 Ky.R. 1212; 1989; eff. 4-4-2008; TAm eff. 8-9-2007, TAm eff. 7-6-2016; Crt eff. 6-27-2018; 46 Ky.R. 674, 1500, 2058; eff. 2-3-2020.

STATUTORY AUTHORITY: KRS 353.540, 353.550, 353.560, 353.592